Pawn Stars: BIGGEST DEALS OF SEASON 13! *MARATHON*

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hey how can i help you i'd like to try and sell this cult revolver this is cool do you know much about it i know it's an old piece i want to say 1800s this is a very early cult single action army this was uh this is 1870s and everyone wanted them and they also had the world's greatest advertising campaign god made all men and colt made them all equal i came down to the pawn shop today to sell my cult revolver i don't know much about cult revolvers mine looks old and i'm hoping it's worth a lot of money if i'm able to sell the revolver today i'll probably just take the family on vacation maybe a cruise or something the colt single action army really was just incredibly revolutionary i mean this this was the most high-tech thing around in the 1870s before this it was you've seen the whole movies them you know packing the guns with gunpowder and putting a ball in this this had cartridges this was super accurate this had interchangeable parts this shot straight it didn't break i mean it was just a high quality gun and this is an incredible set of grips we have a federal eagle here you have the shield the lances these were twice as much money as any other comparable gun to him this is the dream gun of every cult collector if you have ever seen a western you've seen this gun i want this thing i want this thing i want this thing but i have to make sure everything checks out so where did you get this thing i'm a bail bondsman and somebody put it up for collateral and they never paid off the bond so they surrendered it this is an appraisal on it i took it in for 25 000 that's what they owe that's what i'd like to get okay um and they're saying an obvious factory reversal of the numbers it's often the case with arms engraved and nickeled so you want 25 000 for this yeah do you mind if i have someone take a look at this thing i mean i just have a lot of questions on the guy i mean it's really weird that you have two serial numbers on the gun but if everything checks out maybe we can make a deal great okay hang on five minutes i'll get him down here and um we'll go from there okay um it's a pretty neat gun my big fear with things like this is usually when it's too good to be true it's too good to be true what do you think i mean at first look it's it's gorgeous what's really nice about this is this is a known pistol this has been in two books and one of them is the cult bible [Music] so it's a single action army seven and a half inch barrel which was the standard cavalry length the single action army changed everything i mean this is the gun that won the west also known as the peacemaker the cult 45 i mean this started it all cool the grips are the thing that makes everybody go wow you see this here this high relief these are our civil war scenes colt didn't make that grip uh there was a retailer the largest retailer firearms in the united states was shuler hartley and graham this style grip is extremely rare it you see it more on older pistols percussion pistols but on a single action army this grip is these are hen's teeth all right but there's some really weirdness with the serial numbers most colt collectors go i want all matching serial numbers but i think it's a pretty fair assessment to say look these were hand stamped they were making them thousands and shipping them out and that could just be a simple mistake it could drive the value down a bit but there's so much right about this beautiful gun that you know for me i would still want it so we have an 1876 really fancy cult you got a piece of magic here okay so what is this piece of magic worth i would say that at auction i would safely guess that this would sell for 35 000 if it went above 50 it wouldn't really surprise me wow i was thinking it was going to be a little bit less than that but i'm not surprised i mean it's a beautiful piece okay well thanks man you are welcome appreciate it okay thank you this gun is an excellent buy for the shop the model is known as the peacemaker but if rick can get a good deal it'll be known as the moneymaker all right so 25 no problem amy what's your best price you give me 40 000 i walk out the door no you if at 40 000 you're walking out the door with a gun even though you can sell this for fifty five sixty thousand here no no he says maybe thirty five i go twenty six twenty seven thousand five hundred guns yours we got a deal great i'll meet you right over there honey pack your bags because i'm taking this 27 500 and i'm gonna take the whole family on vacation what do we got here led zeppelin one signed by the full band by the full band i only see what jimmy page signed the front and on the rear john bonham robert plant john paul jones that's pretty amazing i've never seen you know led zeppelin sign an entire album jimmy being the leader of the band refused to sign the back this was his puppy yeah jimmy page is now the one begging robert plant to play when led zeppelin came around this band rocked it was like take no prisoners there's probably 24 authentic sign led zeppelin albums in existence so i'm looking for 22 thousand dollars hey this is really amazing led zeppelin is one of the greatest rock and roll bands of all time every one of their albums was in the top ten and six of their albums were number one now four signatures on an album if this is real i probably won't want to put it in the store i want to bring it home the big question is how much do you want for this twenty two thousand as far as led zeppelin collectors go this is the holy grail to let's have one items my huge concern on this we got jimmy page on the wrong side but you're not gonna find something like this so have you ever had the signatures checked out uh yes independently yes um let me call my friend take a look at it of course he really knows his stuff so hang out for a few minutes i'm gonna go give him a call maybe we can do something yeah i understand an expert being brought in but i don't buy things that i have that's about but you know it is what it is good to see you man how are you going good good how are you doing nice to see you this is it that's why i cultured about the greatest rock band of all time yesterday yeah they're the guys who really you know gave everybody else their inspiration well trying to put together a sign led zeppelin album is really difficult john bonham died in 1980 robert plant john paul jones jimmy page they're not really that accessible if the signatures are good if everything checks out there's no doubt this is gonna end up being one of the rarest items i'm ever gonna see the big thing is are they real and what's your opinion of what it's worth okay so the first thing i'm gonna do rick is look at it under magnification right there ballpoint pen um and you take a look right here oxidized it's a little older you know you could tell nice aged ink so we know we've got live ink on here that's a great sign the next thing i want to do is take a look at the examples i have on file the robber plant signature is something i take a look at all the time he would just flow through the signature he had this big r and then the rest would just become all a big flow but i want to go back to the bottom signature whole name is connected and he's doing the same thing here john paul jones probably the nicest signature in the band the last one i want to take a look at the jimmy page and that again is just all over the board but i love this flow and spontaneity okay so it's all legit based on everything i've seen absolutely no doubt this is the real deal sweet and what do you think it's worth it's rare as hen's teeth okay these things just really don't exist the only thing that kind of bugs me a little bit is the one signature on front and the other guys on back but with that said i put this value [Music] right at about ten to twelve thousand dollars okay way off and now with all the respect absolutely i understand you're a signature person you're not really an appraiser uh i actually take that okay no i i actually see i've been doing this for about 25 years so i've seen a lot i've seen a lot of autographs and material and i get where you're coming from too but at the same time um i've seen plenty of these pieces uh yeah i've done a lot of research on these through the years okay i respect your opinion but you know we all have opinions you do realize that jimmy signed the reason why jimmy didn't follow suit with the other three is because this was his baby this album exactly i'm not i'm not actually discounting any of that stuff one second i'm not discounting any of that stuff i would tell you this much that if you told that to the average person they're not going to care they want them all on the back thanks man yep good luck thank you okay thanks drunken cheers if i'm a collector and if i'm someone looking to buy a high-end collectible and especially to spend a huge amount of money i'm going to want all those signatures to be together and be displayable unfortunately this wasn't all together and that kind of takes away from that total value i would give you eight grand for it i i'm sorry you know again miles apart on this yeah what's your best price on it my best price uh would be 17.5 this is this is history yeah i mean i'd go 8 500 but i'm sorry you know okay i appreciate the offer okay well if you change your mind come back the offer is open um have a nice day thanks for coming out thank you people are naive it's opinions everybody has opinions this will sell i have no problem selling i just think that they really need people that know what the hell they're talking about i know what they're talking about this guy is an hey how can i i have a coin i think you might be interested in okay it's a steel penny are you familiar with those yes i am whoa it's a 1944 steel penny that is really neat i know there's less than 100 of them in existence now from my research there's less than thirty that exist okay you know i know pawn shop and i deal in a gazillion different things so i can't know everything even though my kids tell me i'm gonna know it all [Laughter] i'm coming to the pawn shop today to sell a 1944 steel penny this is a very rare coin was given to me as a gift for my 70th birthday i know i don't look 70 years old but i am as old as this coin it's amazing this is a really really weird coin this coin does isn't supposed to exist it was uh that's correct you know world war ii happens along i mean just everything was rationed bacon was rationed and you know the us government came along and says hey you know we make tens of millions of pennies every year basically told the us meant you have to make sense out of something else because copper is a war medal so they started making you know the scents during 1943 out of steel that were zinc plated and everyone absolutely hated them people were confusing the steel scent for a nickel or a dime so in 44 we stopped making the steel pennies but when you're making tens of millions of cents you know they were steel bins and stuff like that and they think that like some of the blanks got like stuck in the corners and things like that and when they were pouring them out into the machines a few of these got made this coin is one of the great mistakes that the u.s meant and in general when the united states met makes a mistake on a coin that coin is going to be worth a lot of money how much are you asking for this a hundred and two thousand dollars whoa uh i am gonna call on a friend look at this thing over 100 you know what i mean fraud 102 102 yeah um this is pretty amazing um these 1944 steel cents and the 1943 copper sense are probably the most famous errors of the 20th century from the united states meant and you would not believe how many people have dug through mounds and mounds of pocket change trying to find one of these because if you find one it's a gold mine and we're looking at one of them right now there you are yes so how many of those actually got out into circulation well uh that's a big question because these were struck at all three minutes philadelphia denver and san francisco they struck oh it was something like 2 billion cents in 43 and 44 at the three minutes and the total population of off metal strikes is about 60 and most of them were struck at philadelphia like this one may represent something like half the known population however it's still a rare coin yeah and there's only 30 of them out of a couple billion that's pretty rare it's a very rare coin so what do you think this would go for approximately thirty thousand dollars and that seems awfully low to me it's a public auction both of them that's okay but you don't necessarily have to bring this coin to a public auction no but public auctions are actually where the most realistic prices are set because every major collector in the world gets those catalogs because there's these are high profile auctions there's many sites that value that coin a lot higher right than that number but okay the the auctions are are very clear in determining the value of these coins okay all right have a going dave all righty thanks the value of 30 000 for this coin is extremely low this is probably one of the rarest penny coins in existence i don't know where the expert came up with that value it is what it is if this thing i would give you like i would give you 25 grand for it no i'm not sure you know you have here i know exactly what i have i have something that i could probably sell between 30 and 35 thousand dollars there's none for sale there's none of these for sale this is the one okay this is you that's the only one in the state of nevada um maybe but it's still what it is what slow should go you know i i drop it down to the minimum that it's valued at about 75 000. not gonna happen then we will not be able to make a deal i have a good one though thanks for stopping by though no problem i think the offer of 25 000 is ridiculously low but i'll just keep it in the family and somebody eventually will sell it for a lot more than i'm being offered today how can i help you i have an antique chinese fingernail guard oh you're going to poke someone's out be careful better be nice let me see here it doesn't really fit me but but what better way to let him know how high-class you are by your style not so tacky long silver fingernail oh this is pretty cool you don't know like where it's from or anything it's from china and i think that it's the manchurian era yeah it does go all the way back to there and this is exactly what the women would award who were you know high class and they wanted everyone to know yeah this is silver you know so it's beautiful yes they wore these to show they didn't have to do manual labor to show that they had servants and i guess the longer your nail was the more sermons you had and the less manual labor you had to do so i don't even think this lady had to get her own glass of water probably not fingernail guards were worn to protect the long fingernails of the elite during the qing dynasty this is a pretty amazing artifact from the time period and i definitely want to make a deal plus maybe i can get some use out of it and convince rick i shouldn't have to work i wouldn't want to break a nail what were you trying to do with it i'd like to sell it how much are you looking to get for it i would like to get 250 for it did you go 100 bucks on it no i don't think i could go 100 on that that's is i mean it's beautiful look at all the workmanship on it would you go 200 on it would you go 240 on it you know what i think i'll buy it from you just hopefully my boss will be proud of me okay good deal all right let's go write it up okay great yo check this out what is that what do you mean what is this it's a finger guard is it for picking your nose or something [Music] you know rich ladies wear them so they don't have to do any work around the house so i was thinking about wearing it so i don't have to do any work around here where is it from it's from china it's for ancient empresses in china how can you tell that because i know it i've seen them before in a book now i know you're lying well the internet same thing how do you know it wasn't made yesterday when you've been around as long as me you just know how much did you spend on it again 240 dollars [Music] so since you didn't ask me before you bought it i'm sure you called phineus why would i call phineas did he even ask you about it this is the first i'm hearing of it corey don't know anything about this neither do you that's why you should have called phineas i know i made a good deal on it that's for sure stop waving it around it's really creepy will you go call phineas and tell him just come by and take a look at it hmm i guess i can nothing that's broken yeah is that phineas hey how you doing chumley what's up man wow that's quite a fingernail you got but check it out wow this is amazing told you rick thinks i messed up well you know i find this very interesting because it comes from a period in china's history boom china and this was worn by people in the court who absolutely did not want to lift a finger to do anything so can you imagine this is just one finger that's what i said to him sorry to tell you they had one of these for every single finger it's rare that this is in silver silver was you know almost more precious than gold which would make me feel this could be a very special one probably very very high ranking court official maybe chushi herself it's pretty i mean i just don't know what it's worth well i'll tell you did you get a good price 240. 240. well i i'm gonna say probably bidding uh in the right kind of auction house it could go to 750. 7.50 that's 500 profit just admit that i know what i'm doing i'm going to leave you two with this piece to nerd out on it i got into some work you did pretty darn good my friend thank you sir i'm proud of you at least someone is around here you'll put that away uh i don't think he's gonna be doing much work in that condition rick i'm thank you i'm worried [Music] i don't know how you do it everyone's got their burden hey how's it going good so what do you have here pennsylvania oilfield 1870s 1880s wooden barrel with gargoyle advertising it's really really cool because most of these were returned for their deposits it's also weird to me that that's called a bung hole by the way i had to say it that's what that's called that's called a you know yes it is it is a bunk i came to the pawn shop today to try to sell my pennsylvania oil field wooden barrel with gargoyle advertising on it in my opinion it's one of a kind i've done seven years of research and cannot find anything equal i'm hoping to get you know 50 grand out of this thing who knows i mean it's deeply cool you know the world was basically dark before 1859 when they found oil in pennsylvania they didn't have pipelines or anything yet and they didn't have steel barrels or anything so this is what everything was transported in so when you went down to your local store you would have a rack of oil there and um that's why this would be out like this and you buy a gallon this is the vacuum oil company and you have the gargoyle here the vacuum oil company then started using the mobile oil logo until 1899. so we know it's right around that time vacuum oil company eventually became mobile yep which is now the biggest oil company in the world right right so i mean it's a really neat piece of history you don't see a lot of these anymore it's the only one i could find how much do you want for it you only get one of these a lifetime in my opinion i'm going to tell you 50 grand that's a start you know yeah that's definitely a start we all got to start somewhere that's right um i think you're asking way too much okay um you're not gonna hurt my feelings i'd give you a thousand bucks for it i mean it's it takes up real estate dude i mean yeah it's and it's super cool but i got to resell it i'll tell you what two grand natures it's worth every penny you know that can we beat the middle of 1500 bucks oh man sweet this is cool let's go do some paperwork i'll let my guys grab it okay i'm settling on fifteen hundred dollars because it is ten times my money i bought it for 150 bucks that's a home run to me what have you been doing i bought a standard oil barrel so what is like a 55 gallon drama no no no because you have to remember an oil barrel is 42 gallons well 42 american gallons a gallon can be two different sizes depending on what part of the world you're in i don't get how a gallon could be a different measurement in two different places it's a gallon well no there's imperial gallons and there's u.s gallons no there's gallons no gallons are bigger in england like our pint is 16 ounces and over there their pint is 20 ounces do you get it now no i don't you weight loss over there cause they use kilograms still just as fat hey rick yeah there's this motorcycle out back you should take a look at it is it cool yeah it's really cool okay that's shiny it's an original 1969 t100c competition model it's absolutely beautiful i love it i wouldn't be selling it except my wife's making me sell it [Laughter] this triumph is one of the very first dirt bikes and most of them were beaten to death this bike looks like it's been restored right i've always loved old triumph motorcycles so i'm gonna have to contain myself [Laughter] tell me uh how much do you want for this thing i've seen these go for as much as twenty five thousand dollars which is kind of where i'd like to settle do you mind if i have someone take a look at it okay i'm not nervous about an expert's opinion or anybody else's opinion the bike is perfect speaks for itself mercy b that is something special brings back memories buddy that's the way it was the history behind these kind of things rick is just unbelievable i mean elvis presley at one time bought every person his crew one of these bikes that near fatal crash that evil knievel had jumping down there at caesar's palace was on a triumph wow everything triumph is today has came from these bikes right here very very special that is definitely cool i'm mark ewell of freedom euro cycle and i'm an expert in triumph motorcycles so is it all original this is a very rare bike this is a c model t-100 those were the ones that were the most sought after especially now by collectors you know as i look over this bike simple little things like the foot pegs they are right i look at all the switches the housing the headlight these tanks still today are hand pinstriped it's a pleasure to look at something like that knowing they're still maintaining that today the up swept pipes on it very very rare piece very few of them left pretty special bike rick okay so what do you think it's worth somebody that was an avid collector of these motorcycles right here i mean they might pay 30 000 but realistically it's in that 20 25 000 range something like that is really what this bike might be worth all right this is really cool but would you like to take it out and ride it that might sell you on it i don't need to ride this bike to make this deal but i'm going to because i can't i'll give you a call if i buy it thank you rick nice meeting you sir good luck thank you finding a 1969 triumph trophy 500 it's so rare this is a motorcycle i think that would fit in the store here but i would like to see rick keep it for himself here we go nice awesome this bike rides like a 1969 motorcycle actually a little better than most 69 motorcycles it handles all right it doesn't have a lot of power the suspension sucks but damn i look good on it i'm in love with this bike i really really hope i can make a deal on this thing what do you think pretty snappy for a 69 bike yeah it's like a brand new bike it is so amy what's your bottom line i'm still talking 25. i'll give you 14 grand now i'm not going to lose it for 14 grand what is your best price i'll come off my 25 20 grand i'll tell you i'll give you 15. i mean it's a fair price i mean if you put this in an auction you know by the time you pay the auction fees and everything you know what a nightmare the auctions can be 17.5 it's a really cool bike i don't get me wrong but i think as far as business goes it will be hard for me to even sell this 15 grand it you drive a hard bargain rick if it wasn't for my wife making me sell it um i'd stick to my guns 15 i'll do it sweet um let's go do some paperwork man okay um this is great i'll make my wife happy i'm gonna settle for fifteen thousand dollars for the bike and i'm gonna buy another motorcycle i just hope my wife doesn't find out about it i brought you one of the most positive and uplifting books i've ever brought you okay the dance of death it's a book from 1547. it is really cool this is basically a bunch of pictures of death coming to call back in the 1500s if you look at like 50 years old you're asian [Laughter] i came into the pawn shop again to see rick to sell my copy of the famous dance of death it's magnificent in the way that the images and the texts sit on the printed page i mean it's a book from 1547. for a book as beautiful as this i think collectors from all walks of life are going to be interested oh this is pretty amazing it's all wood block prints right yeah it's illustrated by wood blocks it's actually done by hans holbein he was one of the most famous artists of the renaissance he was the court painter to henry viii it's a very interesting work kind of grew out of the black plague from the 14th century how much do you want well for the dance of death i don't want to kill you over the price but i'm looking for 10 grand for it 10 000 you know what i do when you come in i'm gonna call rebecca and have her come down oh yeah of course let me get her down here and um see what she has to say yeah have her look at it though okay all right be right back thank you so much i'm really excited that rick is gonna show rebecca she's always reminding me about condition and this time i've brought her a beautiful book in beautiful condition she's going to be really excited to see it i hate to do this but something morbid awaits you oh yes that is the book i told you about the dance of death pretty neat huh it's amazing it's beautiful and rick this is officially my favorite book that you've had me look at it's very very interesting and i know a little bit about it well this comes out of the 14th century in particular really bad century for humanity at least for europe i mean not only the black death but famine and as a result you get this culture that starts looking at their mortality differently death is everywhere we're not getting away from it but on the other hand while we're alive we still need some amusement we need to enjoy ourselves and the dance of death kind of rides that line some of these scenes are kind of funny too look rick i found you [Laughter] see the merchant who's all upset that death's taking his money yes yes that would upset me i love this book it is one of the most important works in the history of book illustration the images in here are timeless they are beautiful and they speak to the human condition i have a few questions it's been rebound yeah but obviously it's rebound very well and the original cover would have probably been wasted anyway right yes ideally you would love to have it in contemporary binding but whoever found it if they'd spent money on the binding then i wouldn't consider that a deal breaker okay so what do you think it's worth okay um the early 16th century there are a number of editions so this isn't technically the first edition that said today these are really hard to come by yeah i think that i think you could get up to 16 000 for this you could you could even maybe even get more honestly okay okay impressive price i like this i get visitation rights you have visitation rights okay if i buy it okay i really hope rick buys this and honestly i don't care if it's at a good price he should just buy it and then i'll have to figure out some way to get it from him so we take nine grand for it look i'm not a person to haggle really we do a lot of deals but i love this book this is really one of the finest series of renaissance illustrations let's just go down the middle to 92 don't bury me 95 down the middle it's a fair price if a rebecca is that enthusiastic about this book i can guarantee you're going to find people who are even more enthusiastic about it i have bought a lot of books off you and i've made money on every one so you got a deal man done okay 9 500 for the book it's really close to what i asked for i'm going to take this 9 500 and instead of focusing on death i'm going to be celebrating life what do we have here an ugly piece of artwork okay so it's done by snowden ml snowden got it from a former in-law and i'd like to get rid of it just like i got rid of them all right all right that sounds like you're a little bit bitter just a little it's different i sort of like it i know about her um ml snowden she's in her 60s she's been doing this ever since she was a little kid she worked with her father her father was a pretty famous sculptor it's not the art everyone likes you know what i mean some people like a little more traditional or a little different but she is a really famous artist and a lot of people like her work i mean she's won a ton of awards and she actually owns some of the tools that rodin used and she uses those tools when she sculpts stuff and it's signed in the sculpture there and it's 14 of 25. do you know the name of it no i don't but you can buy it and call it whatever you'd like [Laughter] even though i'm not familiar with this exact piece i've seen a lot of snowden's before in galleries around the country and they can go for a lot of money and even though it's not the art for everyone i gotta admit i sort of like it it's neat i mean how much were you looking to get out of it fifty thousand dollars fifty thousand um normally i got a friend who i usually call the expensive artwork but um he's out of town it is nice this is very collectible people love this stuff um i'll tell you what i'll give you 20 grand deal i'll take it whoa that was easy okay um 20 grand all right thanks so much i just massively overpaid for this let's go to some paperwork all right well i was actually pleasantly surprised with the negotiation i seriously thought i was gonna end up with like five grand and walk out of here disappointed but i'm very happy with the 20 grand and it's going to be well spent chubb what let me get this thing off the dolly what is that thing it is a statue obviously grab the other side what in the hell is this it's an ml snowden what'd you pay for it twenty thousand dollars why no one's gonna buy this your dad just bought it yeah there's a sucker born every minute no son uh most people aren't like you two that have a picture of a ferrari with naked girls on it that don't have that but i have good art we just grabbed the other side of it no i'm not touching it just pick up the other side sorry dude have fun with that i'm out no chub dude i don't want to just pick it up you're grabbing its legs we're gonna need some more help cory and chum seem to think that they're absolute geniuses and knows so much more than i do so i'm calling in chad just to show them that i know what i'm doing so what do you think wow ml snowden that is photon from the elements of light series okay yeah i got it off a lady and i paid her 20 grand for it i figured i couldn't go wrong wow that's now this piece this series originally sold 58 60 000. okay now she parted with her publisher so a few pieces have come on to the market all right the big question what's it worth because i paid a lot of money for it uh i would put this one probably at about 36 000 okay but the thing about snowden is this is investment quality art and this kind of stuff it's only going to go up 36 thousand dollars i think the market will bear that yeah hold on one second corey chubb rick paid 20 000 for it i think that's a fair market price i think he can do much better than that upon selling it but he definitely he didn't overpay chad thinks i can get right around 36 000 for it you want to buy it chad no come friends yeah we still have to sell it it's it'll sell well you guys are not exactly interior designers no we're more of a beer crowd not a fine wine crowd and it's still ugly as hell yeah i am a good interior designer and i would not put that in any interior horrible they'll never get it they're not art lovers chum's idea of art is a velvet painting and a black light hey how's it going how you doing so what do you have here this is the earliest documented paper money from the ming dynasty china 1368-1399 it's uh called the one quan note which is basically 1000 cash there are two notes in there that's why you're seeing two different shades okay i mean it's pretty cool dude governments have always tried paper money the problem is with paper money there's this massive temptation to keep on printing more and more and more you start getting inflation and the next thing you know what used to cost a buck cost a hundred bucks it's the inevitable keep on printing until you destroy yourself [Laughter] i got these notes from a seller whose brother passed away i really appreciate chinese currency it's one of my favorites to collect i would like to get for the better condition probably around 12 hundred and the lesser conditional probably eight thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars is that what you are for well the better condition one twelve thousand five hundred the lesser condition eighty seven fifty okay have you had these checked out by anybody no i have not had checked out had notes checked out one time they were gone for over two months costs a lot of money i mean i can call someone to take a look at it definitely um a lot of times when it's too good to be true it usually is um hold on a few minutes i'm gonna go give him a call and uh i'm gonna get down here okay okay thanks having an expert come in very interested see way has to say i'm strictly a collector i have not been doing this an incredibly long time so i'm excited to learn everything i can about these notes um he's got printed chinese notes look at that wow um he says it from the 14th century well you know it's so fascinating to me to take a look at ancient chinese currency and there's a guide in history that's the guy who invented paper oh real name was say lung and he actually invented paper in 105 a.d he used emaciated bark he used old fishing nets he used rags boiled it all together and it turns to paper right so it it kind of changed the world sure i've seen examples of currency that go all the way back to 250 a.d and back in those days money was used almost like an iou note basically would say i owe you two amounts of silver and then i owe you seven coils of copper and that way started currency as i'm looking at this uh with my expertise this is ming dynasty okay you flip this over and right there that tells you how much money is involved okay you've got two big dreckets of silver and this is gonna be copper one two three four five six seven eight nine ten uh drunken some copper this is the emperor's seal right here so i can take one look at that and say that's emperor yuan this is ming so you've got two different pieces of currency in here yes so is it real what do you think chun li does it look old to you and 750 years old not as old as you [Laughter] well handmade paper that came out of that dynasty and it's come over my desk at the university before it usually is more afraid it's got a thicker texture to it and and handmade paper is it there's no consistency to it it is kind of like you know rough looking well i'm just going to say based on what i've seen i cannot say that this is real it kind of looks too clean uh too new to be 700 years old i understand all right okay sir appreciate it thank you very much you're basically looking at paper that's 700 years old and by the time it would get to my desk it's very frayed this stuff looked like it came off the press yesterday so it really did throw up a red flag with me i mean maybe there's a slight chance and a really slight chance that it's somewhat legitimate old paper like this it's uh it becomes brittle interesting i mean you can send it off to a currency grading company and maybe for some weird reason they were like this but i really doubt it and i appreciate it have a good one man you too thank you well i definitely am disappointed they feels they're not real i'm not sure if i agree with them i'm not sure how many of these have come across their desk hey man what do we got this is madonna's personal daily planner and phone book from 1988 filled with unbelievable phone numbers dates all completely handwritten by madonna so where'd you get it when i was 12 years old i snuck into a hotel room and i stole it really i'm joking i came to the pawn shop today to sell madonna's personal daily planner and phone book from 1988 this is something i purchased at a very reputable auction house and this item is a great madonna artifact but i think the time has come for me to pass this on to another die hard madonna collector this is really something i've never seen before she's got music video dates and personal people's birthdays sheriff's phone numbers in there jane fonda warren beatty dennis hopper's phone number bruce willis pee-wee herman the list goes on and on did she sign it anywhere her name is actually right here in the front of the book with her phone numbers that she had at the time and you could see this is in her handwriting where it says madonna she's got music quotes she's got little hearts around sean penn's name she was married to sean penn at some point wasn't she she was so wouldn't surprise me if the two of them get back together again i think sean penn has always been madonna's true love i don't know that much about her but madonna has been a huge star for decades and a lot of people consider her the queen of pop and she does have some mega fans out there that would pay good money for this so how much are you looking to get for it i'm asking 25 000 for the book really really when it comes to something like this i really don't even know where to start i'm going to give a buddy a call and have him come down and tell me this is our handwriting because i i really don't even know what to say about this right now i would love to see what he has to say i'll be back i don't feel that it requires an expert's evaluation i know how legitimate and how great this item is this was something i had to have i love madonna i think she's amazing vogue vogue vogue madonna's day planner ah cool obviously madonna's kind of a big deal she's really difficult to get near tough autograph uh she doesn't like signing she doesn't like people just being around her because of that her value is insane she's like one of the most valuable modern era celebrities that's still alive all right what are your concerns i did i don't even know if it's hers it just looks like a bunch of gibberish from from a high school girl i really don't even know what it is this will be uh challenging here um the thing i have to do is because we're not really basing on a signature i've got to check her handwriting um obviously i have to compare her writing compared to the stuff i have she had a way of writing a lot of lowercase letters uh cursive some printing some block letters i'm looking for transition points on her s and you could see it where she wrote shirt here and sean it's literally the same thing yes and she takes her s here and she brings it straight up that's a positive sign just kind of looking for matches and i'm looking at the four and looking all lowercase here and looking literally at the same letter formation yeah her r's interesting her transitions here again i see the same type of r here you know based on everything though i'm seeing here corey it's from her uh and it's pretty cool if you don't know the truth it's really neat piece of memorabilia to have is it actually worth any money though yeah she's one of the biggest stars of all time what's it worth you know what i think is interesting about this piece is that it hasn't really been circulated in a long time and it's kind of a personal piece of hers so it's got a little more than like a signed photographer an album so conservatively i'd say ten to twelve thousand dollar range right in that ballpark i disagree okay i i definitely think it's worth a lot more i've been offered a lot more than that but you know we all have an opinion of course i appreciate you coming down good to see you good appreciate you thank you man you bet i think it's a great buy for the shop finding a personal effect of hers like a date planner or talking about a rare item anything madonna has significant value to it especially something that comes right from her you're asking 25 heard my guy say 10 to 12. i'd give you like four grand for it it's insulting to be honest with you it's worth a lot more than that i'd go down to 20. i'd go to five we're not gonna make a deal are we listen we all make mistakes in life madonna's day planner isn't gonna be one of mine i promise well we'll see what happens i appreciate your help take care man thanks man this was worth clearly over twenty thousand dollars it is uh iconic piece of rock and roll music memorabilia and his uh his offer was insulting but that's okay we all make mistakes hey what do we have here well sir oh obviously it's a gun i figured that out clever this one is uh sir what i have today is i have the british p 1871 martini henry short lever rifle okay very iconic rifle this is another weird bizarroness with the english you know they were still putting bayonets on rifles and doing rifle charges in world war one when they were running into machine guns not a good idea to do a bayonet charge that's the last stand that's the last show of courage there [Music] i initially received the rifle from my great uncle in 1990. this weapon here i have no use for it i'm hoping for 250 what i'd like to do is i have a race gun i'm trying to put together that'll provide a new mag well new trigger system and a new optic so i can go run a three-gun competition this thing is pretty cool this was the rifle used by the most powerful army in the world this was used by the british in the zulu war when that when they fought the zulus um can i put this on absolutely let me help you out okay so this would go like that and then like that there you go and then this would ah that is just gnarly you're ready to charge the hill sir yeah not me [Applause] in the late 1800s the british government offered a prize to gun manufacturers to come up with a new rifle for the british army but after years of testing they liked part of the martini and part of the henry rifle so they decided to come up with a hybrid and they called it the henry martini rifle i guess it was a tie or something like that [Music] it's in really really good shape um how much you want for it well so i was looking for 1250 do you mind if you have someone look at it i mean i mean the thing is sometimes you when you come across these things there's things that make it really exceptional and there's some things that um are bad so um i'll get a little more info and then we'll go from there sounds good to me all right i'll be right back let me give a call an expert coming in i'm fine with that no worries whatsoever any other input can only help me sell this ride this is a martini-henry rifle which i think you know this is the first mass-produced breech-loading infantry rifle that the british army ever adopted the action was so well designed because it had the striker or the firing pin integral to the dropbox action so with one motion when you drop this it actually ejects the cartridge and re-cocks it so now you're ready to fire again okay one of the nice things about this one is it's dated 1872. you see how it's that roman numeral there this actually was originally one of the first ones made in 1872 as a mark one pattern and then in 1876 they brought them back and improved them and made some adjustments and so they marked it too now one of the really interesting things here you see this 780 here just above it there is a w y now that stands for west yorkshire regiment the west yorkshire regiment is also known as the 14th regiment of foot this is one of the oldest military regiments in the british army they actually started under james ii in the 1600s they fought in the revolutionary war they fought in the napoleonic wars they fought in the crimean war they also fought in the second afghan war 1878-1880 so this gun was almost certainly in that war whoa so what do you think it's worth the rifle in this condition with the accessories and the early date known regiment about 1100 cool man thanks i appreciate it good luck health and knowledge thank you sir anytime you have a rifle like this marked to a specific regiment it means that there's a collector out there who really wants it the more specific you get uh the chances of you finding someone who will love it increase so what do you think we're gonna stick with 1250. um you're saying it's worth 100 bucks i'll give you 600 bucks uh i'm gonna say a thousand dollars sir i can't ever not no i'll tell you what i'll go seven i have a number in my head i would like us to both reach there that number better be 700 bucks 800 dollars sir 700 bucks 800 dollars sir i hate hey i really am going the best i can 700 bucks is what makes sense to me i'm gonna have to thank you for your time sir unfortunately we can't get a deal done today if you change your mind give me a call man we'll do sir we couldn't see eye to eye it happens no worries whatsoever but maybe i'll come back a little bit later with the bayonet take another stab at a customer called the shop and she has a knock volley gun she lives in boulder city and the gun range is right in the middle so i figured that's where we'd be i've never seen one of these in person and i've been buying and selling guns for over 30 years that is a big gun where in the hell did you get this it's kind of a crazy story i go to the range all the time with my girls and shoot and there's this guy i guess he really likes me and he gave it to me okay so all right the weirdest of the world the weirdest of the world it's actually a volley gun but people now refer to it as the noc volley gun i've actually never seen one in person only behind some glass in a museum they were just pure insanity to put seven barrels in one gun it's a shotgun on a lot of drugs [Laughter] it's an incredible gun so have you fired this thing i have not i wasn't nervous to shoot it because of the amount of kick that it probably has well you literally got hit in the shoulder with a giant sledgehammer yeah that actually was the chief complaint about them they were designed actually for british warships they were used in the beginning of napoleonic wars back then sea combat the idea was to capture the other boat you didn't want to sink it because that was a boat that you could use in your navy so they get up alongside and they have boarding parties and as the boarding parties came over the deck these guys who had these volley guns were up in the rigging and they would shoot down with seven barrels thinking that it would clear the decks but the problem was seven barrels had a tremendous amount of recoil and the guys were actually dislocating their shoulders and the other thing is with you know 100 grains of powder in each barrel that 700 grains the the flame that came out of the end of this was like 12 feet long so they were setting their own ships on fire so pretty quickly these went out of service okay so um it's all right with you if we shoot them yeah sure okay um i mean what's the worst could happen hopefully it doesn't blow up yeah you need to be very careful with things like this we have no idea what condition it's in inside i'll take a look at it and hopefully we'll be able to shoot it okay the chambers are clear the action's working well so i'm feeling comfortable that we can actually shoot this thing i definitely want to shoot it why don't you let me shoot it i think people miss me less and they'll miss you and i don't care when i shoot it as long as i shoot it this is a true piece of history i'm like i get excited about it because i don't get to see things quite like this really ever and you never get to shoot them all right all right here we go we go oh [Laughter] well i don't think i hit it i think i hit the barrel alex fired it didn't even come close to the target so it's gonna be fun to watch trump shoot this good luck chum hope you like your fingers nice work job that's what i'm talking about only one here who can hit the target you'd have cleared the deck hey it's something i'm good at i usually clear the dance floor so what do these things go for i would value this at 35 to 40 000 okay i mean what's your best price on it um i would take 38 for it you'd take less than that it was a gift i'll give you 28 for it i have to make money i think that's a little bit low how about 30. you know what i'll give you the 30 grand for it great cool thank you so much um just bring it with you to over the pawn shop we'll do some paperwork and i'll give you a check or cash or whatever you want sounds great thank you so much i'll see you there okay see you there cool i got a gun dude oh man i feel like santa came to town i think i made a great deal i usually don't get giddy over things i'm a little bit giddy over this gun there's just so few of them out there so i'm gonna do all right this i think i'll get close to 40 000 for it what do you think chum i think you're a little chicken you should have shot it i'm not chicken you're definitely yellow belly oh shut up chum what's up man how you doing i'm good what do you have here i have an awesome 1980s coca-cola toy okay it's real awesome dude cool this is a uh robot where'd you get it i had a birthday party in bugaking and this was the gift that bugger king gave me i think i'd be pretty pissed if i got this at 12 years old right like a coke can seriously i have a 1980s coca-cola robot when i first got it i tried to play with it it was just a coke can so it really didn't fit in with any other toys so it just went back in the box it's just sitting on a shelf so i'm just trying to get rid of some cl my wife keeps on at me about the stupid things i keep holding on to let me see this here it's pretty cool right coca-cola advertisement but it's also a gobot so in 1984 tonka came out with the the gobots and hasbro came out with the transformers it was basically the same concept you know they were robots that would change into a coke can or a car or airplane and you know with the transformers there was the the autobots and the decepticons and they were battling for thousands of years i don't know too much about gobots but basically the same thing as transformers but not as popular you know many people look at the gobots as transformer knockoffs but in reality the gobots were released before the transformers both of them are pretty cool but the gobots only lasted a few years and the transformers just released their fourth major motion picture this is going to appeal to people who collect coke transformers gobots it is in good condition man yeah um well what do you want to do with it i wanted to try and sell it how much are you trying to get for it uh i went at about 200. hmm honestly dude it's a gobot i'm off you 40 bucks on it uh how about 150 um would you be able to do like maybe 60 bucks 80 i could go 75 on it okay 75 bucks yeah all right that's a deal let's go over here and write it up okay i got it for free when i was a 10 year old it sat on the shelf for about 30 years and i got 75 bucks for it so i think that's a pretty good deal now we must plan takeover of your boss's enterprise that's been a long time so i've seen one of those i just bought it it's a little uh gobot it's like a transformer thing it's not a gobot jump how do you know okay it's like a transfer it transforms boom done chump yeah what i'm trying to tell you is it was coca-cola just made it it wasn't done by gobots or anything so what is it then so coca-cola made this promotional thing in england but there was no reason to have gobots or transformers do it when they could just do it themselves not have to pay a licensing fee or anything like that so they just made a transforming coke can i just i don't get it they're so cool how much you pay for it 75 bucks i actually did good i mean we could sell it for like 150. go go cocaine as long as you don't break put it away put it on the shelf until we sell it all right all right you shall live to pawn another day charm how you doing good what do you have here it's an aqua etching by moroe john moreau okay it looks really cool definitely i really like muro he's one of my favorite artists it's simple but yet your subconscious still thinks what could this be you know this could be a kite this could be a road this could be anything you know like it really gets you thinking what could this be ten thousand dollars do you know a date on it or anything like that no idea i don't know the title of the date all i know is it's titled 49 out of 50 so i assume it's an addition of 50. there's definitely a big market for morel's work in 2012 southern b set a record by selling his masterpiece at 12 blue for 37 million if this piece is real it won't fetch millions but it could be worth thousands so how much do you want to get for it uh 12 000 as far as i'm thinking there was an art gallery downtown about 10 years ago it had similar etchings by monroe and they were selling anywhere between forty and seventy thousand dollars you know what i can see this going for twelve thousand that's not out of the ballpark for a more piece the thing is even though his artwork is worth a lot of money he's one of the most faked artists around for this period of time like his signature has faked a lot and i'm not a signature expert but signature looks a little iffy to me it kind of looks like stop and go stop and go moreau had a real fluid signature i would just like someone to come down and take a look at it i got a art expert brett he's dealt with morals for a long time so give me a few minutes and i'm gonna go call him absolutely sure i'm a little nervous to hear what the expert has to say because i don't have a good baseline to know what it's worth and i am also unsure if it's truly authentic miro miro on the floor very very nice jean-marie is really one of the 20th century masters he's right up there with picasso and matisse he was a master of all media from engravings to aqua tents to stone lithography he could do it all i am familiar with this image i've actually seen this the title is called demi mondaine at her window you can see that this is a figure you can see the eye you can see the appendages here and it's it's probably a woman of the night wearing an ornate gown with you know beautiful flowing colors and standing in front of a window and it's a window view of the the night sky you've got the stars the moon or maybe these are city lights i mean this is really indicative of his late period work okay now did you have some specific questions chum i don't know if it's real and also the signature is not quite as flowy as i would normally see from a moreau signature was it okay if we put this up on the table you're the boss okay great all right let me take a closer look here yeah i think what we have here is a it's a mixed media print i do see plate marks which would be indicative of an engraving where they actually press the copper plate into the paper you can see it kind of you know the trace of it there it's on the right type of paper so this does appear to be an original moreographic excellent great okay now this is where i run into some issues i have seen this work and every single one that i've seen the signature usually appears higher up within the composition below the green and the number typically appears below this orange sphere the signature i'm a little worried about there's a lack of fluidity here i mean there's a lot of breaks in the arches of the m i think what this might be was an original graphic that somebody else signed and numbered which is a shame because even an original graphic that's unsigned and unnumbered is going to be worth many thousands of dollars it's kind of like autographing a mickey mantle card yourself you know it loses a lot of the value again i can't say with a hundred percent authenticity but based on my experience with this particular work in moreover i i just see too many red flags to advise chum to purchase it all right sorry all right all right all right nice meeting you all right thank you thanks for coming in have a good one guys i'm afraid i had to advise chum to pass on the work even though i think the graphic itself is genuine there's just too many question marks about the signature and the addition for me to advise him to purchase it so even though he thinks it's a real monroe graphic i'm gonna have to pass it's gonna be hard for me to sell it still seems kind of fictitious i understand all right well thanks for bringing it in it was a pleasure to look at it yeah thank you it's very disappointing to hear that it's an authentic mural but someone forged tomorrow's signature now i'll probably end up hanging up the more wherever we end up staying and enjoying it as much as i can what do we have here i have a bone record um what is a bone record it's an x-ray it's like an x-ray record that they use for like banned music back in the day you know it's definitely an x-ray of something it looks like it looks like boobs it's not boobs maybe i'm just seeing a things record is like a vinyl x-ray that they used to get banned music on back in the 40s and 50s i'm gonna try to sell it for 500. if i get the full 500 i am going to spend the money on recording an album for my band i'm just sort of like baffled by it where did you get this thing my grandpa he gave it to me because i played music and i can't do anything with it so i'm assuming it's russian yes it's from russia my family's actually from russia so i've never heard the term bone record but i remember hearing about how the bootleg records in eastern europe they would press records on x-rays because up until the berlin wall came out the soviet union at the time didn't like western culture they weren't allowed to have western music this is how they sort of pool like them this was the soviet union you did what they told you to do and if you had any contraband they sent you the gulag you went to a work camp and worked there so you died that was their system of government i feel like i'm in a gulag not until the berlin wall came down in 1989 was western music allowed the soviet union it was illegal to own any type of record-making device recorder it was even illegal to own a printing press or a xerox machine so it makes sense that they make music on an x-ray it's kind of weird but that's the materials they had and that's all they could do so have you ever played their album or the record no i've never played it you have to have like a special record player to play it and i i don't i don't even know where to get one okay so um i'm assuming you want to sell it yes and how much do you want to sell it for 500 that seems like a very arbitrary number yes do you mind if i call on my music guy i just completely baffled with it now this is uh go ahead i mean for all i know it could be worth five dollars or could be worth five thousand so okay give me a few minutes okay we'll do i think it's it's great that an expert comes in because i know nothing about it so it'd be interesting to see what he has to say have you seen these things before i've heard of them i've never actually messed with one before it's a made on an x-ray yeah yeah it was probably russian western music was illegal so these guys would bootleg stuff they made them on whatever material they had and so x-rays were probably pretty regularly available you know bone records are kind of collectible you know you can get these guys that are obsessive about records and the history of it and they're a neat thing to have in your collection that you could say like oh yeah well you've got that well i've got one of these you know kind of thing so do you think this thing will play it might i'll put it on here and play it but it might like cut a spiral in it or destroy it i don't know if it's going to work or not okay risk is on you guys man [Music] it sounds like somebody's killing somebody yeah it does kind of i can understand why the russians were always so angry you know it's probably 50 years old so who knows what it sounded like when they first did it it might have been pretty decent what are these things worth stuff like this kind of falls it's a copy it's like saying well i got a cassette tape of the beatles white album you know what i mean it's a copy it's a cop it is a rarity and stuff like that and there aren't that many of them but there's people asking two or three hundred bucks for them but i don't i've never seen one sell for that much they usually sell right around 80 or hundred dollars that's usually what they end up selling for okay okay well thanks man that's no problem dude want to get an idea on it yeah yeah yep hope it helps all right catch you guys later i think it's kind of a cool buy for rick just because it's something he's never seen before you know it's the first one i've ever actually put my hands on it's kind of a rare thing nothing else he gets it right it's cool to just conversation piece in the shop so i'll give you 30 bucks third 30. um jeez he said 200 so i i'd like to start there if anything well no he said he seen people ask as much as that but he's seen himself for like 80 or 100 bucks right like you said it's an oddity it's just it's one of those weird things i'll tell you what i'll give you 50 bucks and i won't give you a dime more um yeah that's fine okay all right sweet deal that's good we got a deal thank you i'll meet you right over there on the right show or do as a matter of fact this guy will write you up all right got it if i would have got the 500 i would have recorded my band but since i'm getting 50 i'm just gonna go buy an album at the store what do we got got a couple of guitars for you dc comics john bolin batman and joker guitars set oh wow this one's even more impressive the joker i didn't know the joker played guitar cool john bolin i mean he basically became the guy if you wanted a badass custom guitar that you went to and this guy's got a really interesting story he went down an apprentice to believe it was gibson or one of them and decided that that's what he wanted to do with his life and he started making custom-made acoustics for his friends and friends of friends and then one day he ended up making one for some folk singer and then billy gibbons from zz top is what really really put him on the map and then i think he made him for just about everybody that wanted a really high-end custom guitar right when it comes to making custom guitars bowling is a guy you go to and everybody from joe perry to steve miller have had this guy make him for him so if this is legit we're not looking at your average guitar here batman and joker i didn't know that he made them though the cool thing about the joker is it also has this little chip in it and if you push this button when it's all hooked up to a amplifier you push that in the joker laughs ha ha really cool that is cool yeah that's unique yeah ever since the success of the star wars and how much money they made from licensing stuff every movie they could license our stuff did and with the batman stuff you know there was no exception there i just didn't know that they would be rolling guitars kind of unique right yeah so what are you looking to get for him i want to get 15 000 for them okay for the pair for the pair okay this is a little out of my realm i got to tell you man we're talking about really high-end guitars in a really niche market and it just would make me a little more comfortable if i called a buddy of mine to come down and take a look at them i understood all right once you hang out and i'll be back in a little bit sounds good when you called for an expert i thought it was great because i think that these guitars speak for themselves i know i have all my paperwork done and the guitars are solid hey what's up man hey what's up jesse i got um i got two guitars uh john bolin batman and joker i don't know i don't really know much about him you think you come down and take a look at them well if they're legit they're probably anywhere from for the pair 7 500 to 8 500 but um you know i can't make it down there but i i got i got somebody to come down there i'll i'll send him down here you guys way right on man i appreciate it cool no problem jesse sent me john bolin oh wow john bowen okay um lee john bolton i am oh wow looks like a couple of my guitars here that's a what a treat well i guess you'd be the guy to talk to about these then wouldn't you yeah you know made these 26 years ago wow my name is john bolin and i'm the owner of bowling guitars and i'm a guitar maker known as a luthier my buddy jesse knew i was in town gave me a call and he said hey you won't believe this they've got a pair of your batman and joker at a pawn shop you gotta go down and see him they are absolutely beautiful my lord pretty much looks to me like they're unplayed so how'd this all come about well it started with the batman this was to celebrate the batman movie and um we did the prototype and at that point we make a lot of guitars for zz top and the word got out to billy that we were doing this and he was like oh i have got the perfect design for the joker so billy gibbons from zz top designed this he did that's awesome man i brought an amp out i'm kind of curious to hear the joker laugh [Music] it's a seven second loop so you okay that's pretty cool so i mean you're the guy to ask are they legit oh yeah absolutely yeah yeah absolutely i think my fingernail marks are on there somewhere okay i really appreciate you coming down thank you very much you're welcome thank you thank you sir nice to meet you nice to meet you cory so you wanted 15 000. bad news is i can't have uh john bowling give me the price of the guitars cause he built them and i'm sure to him they're priceless okay so i uh i did talk to my buddy on the phone and he told me that they'd probably retail for about 7 500 for the pair you know we're so far off i mean you want 15 000 i mean uh i'll go 7 500 for him i know batman sold for 7 500 by itself once i definitely would not sell them for 7 500 yeah and that's going to be the most i can pay um but i really appreciate it man it was fun yeah it was thanks so much um if you hurry up you might be able to catch them and get them to sign them for you out there if you want thank you take care there's no way i can take 7 500. i've seen one alone sell for 7 500. we're going to hop in the batmobile and head out of here hey how's it going good how you doing what do we got this is a tory hanzo sword signed by david kearney who played bill in the movie kill bill sweet love the movie david carradine played the head of a group of assassins they all had really weird names uh black mamba the whole snake thing was just kind of silly yeah these swords were signed by david carrington probably about 10 or 11 years ago i used to collect swords but now they're just collecting dust i'm looking to get about 2 200. i want to sell these swords because i'm hoping some collector who loves the movies who loves kill bill can properly display them in some beautiful place kill bill couldn't have came at a better time for david carradine the guy was pretty much broke uh quentin tarantino just happened to be a kung fu fan and pretty much offered him a role he didn't really get paid all that much for it but it kind of brought him back into the limelight where people were actually paying him to sign swords and do signings again yeah kill bill was originally just supposed to be one film but by the time tarantino was done the movie was four hours so the studio released it in two different parts that ended up being a really good decision because both films killed it at the box office so nerd replicas yeah this one is the demon sword which was bill's sword and this one is the bride's rampage sword okay do you mind if i take a look at him now go ahead [Music] okay the swords aren't really much man they're made in china and the blade's made to look like it's tempered it's not really tempting no i agree what are you looking to do with them i'm selling okay um any idea of how much you want for them 2 200. okay that's uh that's quite a bit of money i can tell you that before he died these were going for about 80 bucks a piece so i'll tell you what let me have a buddy of mine from a psa come down and he knows the autograph world better than anybody and he can tell me if since he's died if they've gone up that much or what the deal is all right all right i'll be right back all right sounds good i think it's great that an expert's being called in because i'll get the signatures authenticated and i might learn some more things about this piece well i got some signed david carradine swords oh cool um when you talk about like the 70s cult classic type actors you know he was a you know b-movie guy he did over 100 movies ended up being pretty popular i mean he had the whole kung fu thing and then once kill bill came out his popularity went insane for a few years and then he ends up dying in a strange way yeah but you know people start really into this guy david carradine carries a little weight within the autograph community i mean he kind of went through a period where no one really cared about him and then he went through a big explosion where he got popular again after kill bill he was really fan friendly so there's still plenty of it out there in the marketplace what are your concerns corey i've had the david carradine signed hattori hanzo replicas before he died they were going for like 80 bucks i don't know what they're worth now well yeah that's usually the thing is when somebody passes away their signature ends up going up in value i just want to do a few things want to just take a look at the signatures make sure they're live all right that's the first one um second one same kind of exact pattern on there definite live there's no doubt about that looks like a sharpie uh the next thing i want to do is just take a look at a couple examples of his signature the guy was pretty sloppy when he signed him so very simple you could see here an authentic example i see this big d here and i'm starting with that you get the heavy lean he curls in on both of these seats and it's just kind of sloppy so live ink no problem with that signatures match perfectly definitely authentic no doubt about that okay so what do you think they're worth well are these rare no are they cool absolutely um i put the value as a pair of these [Music] right about six hundred dollars it was better than what it was appreciate it sure good to see you there thank you yup good luck thanks the thing with the swords is i would classify them as manufacturer memorabilia they're really neat looking pieces and they look like the ones they use in the movie but it's just kind of a manufactured piece and he sat down and signed them in a production line so they're really not that rare they're just kind of cool a pretty big jump to 2200 man uh yeah what are you willing to take oh you know it's unfortunate i didn't i didn't really expect him to be worth so little you know i would give you like 200 bucks for him yeah i don't know i was thinking like 1200 would be like my bottom you know 1200 i we're not gonna be able to make a deal now and i appreciate it i appreciate it thanks thank you 200 that's just way too low i mean i understand where they're coming from but in my opinion these are worth much much more hey i'll get up here hey i brought a menu from 1876 from a dinner to honor william sharon of the comstock load can you read that i can't read cursive um some sort of chablis chablis consume royale it's obviously a french menu so what would happen when you wanted to change the menu [Laughter] it's a silver menu to honor a famous senator from nevada i'm selling the menu for ten thousand dollars but the least i would take is around six thousand dollars if i'm able to sell the menu today i'll probably take that money and use it to buy more cool stuff it's really interesting where did you get it i bought it at an auction uh came from an estate okay to the honorable liam sharon by his old friends of the comstock load palace hotel william sharon was a senator from nevada the comstock load it's one of the greatest stories in american history there was a guy named comstock and he came across a few guys mining comstock rides up on his horse he's going well you're on my property but comstock was really really reasonable what he told him was listen guys let's start drop a contract you guys can keep half of it i get the other half since this is my property they all signed it he went on his way rode his horse into carson city with the local claim office and claimed the land cool the comstock load was the original silver find in nevada it created a silver rush that's what made nevada a state and actually helped finance the civil war so how much you're looking to get out of it ten grand okay ten thousand dollars how did you come up with that number i looked around and found some auction records and some are high and some are low but it seems like the auctions that play to a western collector audience get more than that let me get a friend of mine down here he knows everything there is to know about nevada history and let me see if there's something astronomical about it that i'm not seeing okay fair enough i'll be right back hey rick if you're calling mhp telling to bring down some french fries maybe some french dressing my fault i didn't ask him to bring french fries with french dressing you do french dressing on french fries she was in the mood for some french so what do we have uh this is the tree i was telling you about oh yes okay honorable william sharon by his old friends with the comstock load william sharon ended up in charge of the bank of california and he ended up being able to control the comstock and made huge amounts of money and ended up buying a senate seat in 1876 he was a senator from nevada living in san francisco and not bothering to show up in washington very often he was considered probably the worst u.s senator ever okay sharon was one of the major investors in the palace hotel where the dinner was held and this is the sort of piece that you might get from a very high-end dinner of the era what we have here was a plate that would be a commemorative everybody who went to the dinner got one of these okay um yeah but there was only you know 20 25 people at the dinner the one thing about this one is that it's been modified originally this was a flat piece probably a jeweler has bent it here added the feet to it so it could be maybe a a card tray something like that okay is there anything astronomical about this it's cool i mean it's a piece that ties back to a really important character in nevada and california history it's not unique but there are not many of them left i've only seen one other one and not many of them would have been made to begin with okay okay not a problem pizza afterwards i guess you didn't bring me french fries we better get something you know if the shop buys it it is an interesting piece and it looks to be absolutely original and absolutely correct the reason i called markdown was because you wanted ten thousand dollars for this i just want to find out if there was something i was missing for ten thousand dollars you can get gold coins made in the carson city mint do you understand what i'm saying there's a lot rarer cooler things you can get i mean you have it's a pretty interesting piece of nevada history but it's not ten thousand dollars i mean you have 100 with the silver here i mean i'd give you like 200 bucks for it yeah no i think i'm gonna go ahead and maybe put it in auction i think i'll stand a better chance like that okay we'll have a good one man yep thanks thanks for bringing it in let's go get that pizza i'm not eating with you it's a shame i couldn't sell the silver menu today but every cloud has a silver lining and i'm going to go elsewhere with it hey how come out this make me a rich man so you want me to make you a rich man by buying this of course rossler and faye self-lighting and extinguishing lanterns patented may 18 1858 i've asked around people who deal in old things like that no one has ever seen another one like it okay well it looks like you both deal with old things maybe you should go have a drink together today i brought in self-lighting and extinguishing a lantern from 1858 i bought the lantern in a sale in huntington west virginia i can't find any evidence that it was ever actually produced commercially so i'm assuming that because i have one then it must be the patent model all it's pretty interesting it's uh the patent thing is neat is it a big deal to get the patent well back then it was i mean this is 1858 and this patent number 20 0302 so that's 65 years in and we got 20 000 patents yeah we're only at 10 million or so today they just didn't issue that many patents back then i mean it was probably in uh in 1858 i'd be surprised if they did a thousand patents that year nowadays there's over well over a thousand patents a day submitted to the patent office and it was innovation like this that um changed the world it really did this was the original flashlight all right well my phone comes with a flashlight now so you can keep it in the 1800s this self-lighting lantern was a pretty revolutionary idea it used to be a pain to light a lantern on a windy day this you just pressed a button and it was lit and patent models are really collectible but i don't even know if that's what we're looking at what do you want to do with it i kind of like to sell it how much you want for it about two thousand dollars so how do you know this is a patent model um just because the tags on it doesn't necessarily mean it's the patent model okay i have no proof okay i just have decades of knowledge okay it's really really cool and it might be the patent model i mean but uh i'd want a patent letter or something with it and i don't have that it didn't come with it or i would have brought it okay i'm gonna pass on it because i just i you know you're asking a lot of money and if i go to resell it i got to be sure it's a patent model and i'm not okay all right thanks for bringing it in okay i'm kind of sad that i didn't get what i wanted but it's something that probably belongs in a museum and it's probably where it will wind up hey how's it going uh pretty good i have a couple of interesting notes i think you may be interested in i have a 50 legal tender note from 1880 and i have an 1890 legal tender treasury note which is also known as an ornate or a fancy back okay these are cool and they're pretty damn rare this note is legal tender at its face value in payment for all debts public and private i'm impressed you can even read that i pay extra money so you don't see the line on the bifocals the notes i'm selling are very high grade they're very collectible the cool thing is that notes are really portable artwork you can take them and show them other people i'm looking for 35 000 the least i'm willing to take for them is somewhere between 20 and 25 thousand these things are great these were precursors to the federal reserve more or less who are our modern money these were not backed by anything they just printed them but what gave them value is is you could pay taxes with them and you didn't pay taxes they take everything you have and throw you in jail yeah so where did you get these on the internet i was intrigued by the backs more than the fronts it's a greenback i just love everything about these the original term greenback came from legal tender notes because they always printed them with greenbacks we used to make some really really pretty we did gorgeous these bills are incredible these things rarely come on the market so i'd be shocked if one of them came in my shop much less two of them they're just cool how much we're looking to get out of them thirty five thousand dollars okay um 18 000 for the ornate back 17 000 for the fifty dollar note okay tell you truth i have no idea if that's a great price or not let me call on someone to look at them and we'll go from there that's fair okay i'll be right back okay i really feel good about an expert coming in because i've been out of the market for a while i think what really helped me make a more informed decision as to selling the notes ah this is why i call you in when i have this weird stuff great paper money these are two very fantastic items i could tell right off the bat this was an 1890 20 legal tender this series is far better and more valuable and rare than the 1891 the government felt that it was easier to counterfeit a more ornate back which is bizarre so an 1891 didn't have the intricacies that this snow clearly does a 50 surprisingly even though it is a higher denomination note it is actually more common than the snow doesn't mean it's worth less or more it just means it's more common the collector basis for both notes are quite significant rick what are your questions you have with this okay it's the same i have with all this old paper money i need to know what grade it is and you know what's it worth okay it's an excellent question i'm gonna use my light because these look to be in fantastic condition actually it does have a corner fold i don't know if you can quite see it okay so you notice that but i'll put this in the classic about uncirculated so this 50 is quite nice but it does look like something fuzzy was up here some ink or a pencil someone definitely got a little creative uh or try to be so what are they worth okay the uh the 20 treasury note i would expect an auction to bring between 12 and 16 000 and the 1880 50 legal tender note i would expect to bring between 10 and 15 000. on a conservative basis somewhere between 22 and 30 basically that's about right i think that sounds reasonable i'm glad to hear that oh thanks man thanks rick good to see you some of the rarest of rare notes actually is a 1890 000 treasury banknote that have sold upwards of nearly three and a half million dollars if rick can negotiate a deal for both these notes i think it's an excellent buy what's your best price on i'd like to get thirty thousand for the two of them taking more 17. they're absolutely beautiful and when they're this nice they sell quick i'll give you that i think you can get the 30 for it um 25. i'll tell you what i'll i'll pay you at the bottom end of what pete said 22 i think i'm i think i'll do all right fine you got a deal sweet beat you right over there we'll do some paperwork man i'm taking the 22 thousand dollars because at the end of the day that's a number that i can deal with and i'm gonna look for another collection so right now it'll sit pretty in the bank account until that time comes hey how can i help you i have a special volume of poetry in this book four quartets by t.s eliot that's cool is it a first edition or something or it's more than a first edition i think it's the true first edition okay he was the bastard poet of the first half of the 20th century it was the what pellet a master pose okay i thought you said a different word all right i hope not [Applause] i bought this book in a local thrift store this book is special to me because t.s eliot was one of the most renowned poets of the 20th century i'd like to sell the book because i think it needs to be in the hands of someone who really appreciates it this is really neat when he was alive he was considered the greatest american poet some people consider him like the greatest american poet we ever had i know that he had like a really eclectic education he went to harvard he went to europe he studied sanskrit it is really really embarrassing i've never read tsl yet t.s eliot considered four quartets his best work and his masterpiece in the 1940s he won the nobel prize for literature i mean that's how big this guy was so what makes it a true first edition the true first says first american edition and there were only about 700 or 800 of those printed as i understand elliot didn't like the looks of the book or the typeset or something and they just stopped distributing them so there's only that many that were ever issued with first american edition written okay so how much do you want for it three thousand dollars okay i have no idea if that's a good price or not and the condition of the dust cover really worries me but i do have a friend who will know everything about this great and who's probably read everything tsla has ever done five times so i'm gonna give her a call get her down here and she'll help us out with it i can't wait okay i'll be right back i figured you would absolutely love this you were right [Laughter] she says it's a first edition first state i recognize it immediately it actually has four different sections and they were released individually in the 30s and then this came out in america during the war because it's a wartime publication there are some issues with it a lot of people who are specialists in different jobs they were out on the front and they had people working in jobs that they weren't as familiar with so you see a lot of problems that show a little bit of amateurism and you see that here these margins it's not right so there's faulty printing with this and in fact because of the faulty printing they actually pulled the run however they had to keep a certain amount of copies out in circulation to preserve the copyright okay so they kept 788 copies this is one of those copies so what's it worth if you were going to make this sellable you would probably need to restore the dust jacket you're looking at an investment of 300 to 600 just to restore the dust jacket so with that in mind um a copy of this that's restored i would say you're looking at 2250 to 2500. thank you you're welcome elliot is very well respected and he changed poetry if the shop can negotiate a deal then i think it's a good buy elliot is always going to be important and that's not a bad investment it really is a kind of one of a kind even with its flaws i know that okay but you also have to realize if i buy the book off you i have to spend the money to get these repaired the best i can give you is a thousand dollars for it condition is very very important how about 1500 i'll tell you what i'll do 1100 because any other price makes no economic sense to me none all right 1100. okay cool thanks thank you come on over here and we'll write this up i bought this book at a thrift store for 75 cents and i just sold it for 1100 so it's a very good day for me what do we have here i have here my uh antique space explorer toy cool this is a mark's 10 toy slowly through the years there's been like this massive collector community for things like this especially to find one of these things in great shape this is something little boys played with and you know how little boys are we destroy everything that's right that's right i still do sometimes it's an awesome piece i love the litho it runs it does everything the toy's supposed to do i'm hoping for three thousand dollars today the antique toy is worth so much because of its rarity i cannot find anything on this piece um and i have tried to look everywhere this is pretty damn cool you know much about the mark's toy company not too much no they were literally like the biggest toy company in the world they've been around since the 1920s they were like the first guys to go to like japan and hong kong and start making the stamped out metal toys this was like the early japanese stuff right after world war ii right if you look at pictures of japan right after world war ii just about everything was bombed out and uh they were looking for you know being able to manufacture things with what they had left and inexpensive toys made out of sheet metal was their thing after world war ii one of the things the japanese manufacturing base made was inexpensive metal toys and quite frankly the quality was pretty bad so they didn't last long so it's absolutely amazing to see one in this kind of shape so how much do you want for it well i looked all over the place for this and i found in an old toy magazine where it was listed for 5 500 now that's with the box of course but i figured 3000 would be a good price to ask for okay this is one of the holy grails this is one of the big ones and this looks like it's beat up a little bit but this is incredible shape i think i know enough about this thing when you saw a price for 5500 that is with the box right and i'm just telling you that's a hundred times more rare especially for a toy like this i'll give you a thousand bucks for it you know and when it comes to toys comes to anything like this condition is everything again it's an incredible shape i'll give you that but it's definitely not perfect right 17.50 no i'll give you 1200 bucks i have to resell this thing okay right they are very collectible but maybe one out of 20 000 people collect old sheet metal toys and then you got to find someone willing to pull that kind of money out of their pocket would you do 1300 let me do 1250. [Music] sure all right all right thanks man i'll meet you right over there and uh we'll do some paperwork okay okay thanks i think i knew enough about this toy to make a good deal like i always say a little bit of knowledge can be a really dangerous thing so i'm gonna bring it down to johnny just to ease my mind hey dude what's up hey what's up rich look what i bought oh sweet man old limewar toy uh-huh it's all there it's in really good shape wow every time you come it's something better and better these are part of pop culture in the 50s and 60s you know every little kid would have been exposed to that on the news with the space race going on so you know kids had ray guns and then they had 10 robots and then of course little space vehicles this is part of pop culture from back then so i tried to call you and come down the shop but you weren't there so i bought it i think i made a good deal on it and i just wanted to see what you thought it was worth cool well let me take a closer look in the collector world these are enormously popular collectors go nuts for these and this is definitely you know up there as far as some of the rare tin toys from that era of the colors are really bright i mean look at the red on the astronaut the nose is clean um what i like the most about this this is a friction toy so i mean young boys would have just been revving it up all day long and that whole bottom surface is just gorgeous so what'd you pay for this 12.50 if i lose money it's your fault because you weren't here [Laughter] well let me tell you something man i mean with the condition that it's in you could sell this easily for 2 500. cool man so you'll do well with this thanks man all right any time all right it's really risky for rick to buy a toy without me seeing it but rick definitely did a great buy it's super rare and condition was great you should have no problem selling it in the shop what we got there beer no [Laughter] it's empty i drank it on the way over [Music] well i came to the pawn shop today to settle an american computer tanker i believe it's made 1730 to 1750. i like to ask 20 000 for it i think it's worth a lot more lowest price i could probably take is about 13 000. what exactly is this it was made before the american revolutionary war by a very famous pewter and it's a pretty darn rare piece it is cool though i mean i really do dig it tankers became really popular in europe and eventually in the new world starting in the 1500s they were basically the original beer mug and they're mostly made out of pewter they could be worth a lot of money depending on where and when they were made it was the only really viable metal for dishes besides maybe like silver or gold but that was way too expensive to make dishes out of and um when our immigrants started coming over here in the 1600s 1700s we didn't have a lot of craftsmen and most pewter stuff we would just import from england um the english sort of discouraged manufacturing in the states sort of why we had a revolution if this is pre-revolutionary pewter it's worth a ridiculous amount of money yes how much were you looking to get out of this well i was thinking about 20 000. let me have someone take a look at it because it's not that i don't trust you it's just anything like this from this period is being faked or has been faked so let me get him down here he'll take a look at it and then we'll go from there okay you got it hang out if your mouth okay i'll be right back i have no problem with an expert coming in this is a genuine piece there's no question in my mind so i'd like an expert to confirm that good to see you howdy my name is mark hi i'm bill bill good to meet you okay we have this is what he says is a pre-revolutionary war american pewter tankard that's nice very few early pieces especially pre-revolutionary war pieces from america survived today the standard life span of a plate or a porridger was only about 10 years you know and then it would get melted down and recast you mind if i take a closer look at it just please okay it's an interesting piece when you're looking at a piece like this what you want to see is how much of it is original and how much of it isn't there's been a lot of work done on this the handle at least has been reattached if not replaced the lid i believe has been replaced the one piece that is really the the final criteria on this is the touch mark appears to be ib that would be john basid okay you're looking at pre-revolutionary war american pewter john bassett is one of the people that you look for and he is a highly collected name in pre-revolutionary war pewter is that what its mark looks like yeah i did see one other john bassett touch mark uh but it was in a book it was a photograph of a touch mark um unfortunately on this one i cannot tell you that it's an original john bassett okay thanks man sorry about that all right no problem okay take care very good to meet you okay when i first looked at this tankard i saw that it is touch marked but that is one of those very rare touch marks that i would want to look at next to another original to see whether it actually matches i wish i could make you an offer and this wasn't so anticlimactic but thanks for coming in man okay take care thank you well i'm feeling a little disappointed in the fact that he could not confirm that it was real i'm sure it's real he can't be an expert in everything hey how's it going pretty good how are you guys i brought my shower curtain in today it's kind of creepy it's even creepier because it's signed by anthony perkins the basketball player no no the psycho dude i won the shower curtain in san diego uh on a contest and anthony perkins signed it when he showed up to give a speech about directing uh psycho three i wanna sell the shower curtain because i need a little extra money and uh it's a decent item i'm gonna ask uh 400 but i think the least i would take would be three this is deeply deeply cool is it just me or is it weird that you got a shower curtain autographed well it has to do with the whole psycho thing did you ever see the original movie psycho no there's a movie came out i think it was 1960. hitchcock directed it it has the most iconic horror flick seen in it ever there was a shower scene where supposedly hitchcock took a week to film that you never actually saw her stabbed you just saw the blood going down the drain it doesn't sound very scary it was incredible the way it was filmed is considered like a cinematic masterpiece thing it was like the scariest movie ever it's iconic the shower scene in the original psycho was radical to the extreme during its time anyone who originally saw that at the movies was looking over their shoulder before they got in the shower okay so how much do you want for this um 400 it's not a photo it's something a little bit more unique uh to tell you the truth it actually sounds like a reasonable price you just want to make sure it's his signature in his hand just hang out 15 minutes i'll get a guy down here and i want to look at this all right sure i'll be right back this is my shower curtain expert yeah all righty just started this is my shower curtain very cool so he died in 1992. it's definitely an unconventional item to see signed by him and really and this is a good thing about him rarely see anything on him so when you tell me you have a shower curtain signed by this guy it sounds kind of far-fetched okay well you know anthony perkins i mean he had started some really big movies and he was very well thought of in hollywood but this one movie psycho obviously that kind of put him on the map it's one of the most historically significant films in movie history so is it legit well okay two things i want to do first is the ink that's pretty interesting it actually looks like blood [Music] here's an authentic version of a signature and we see some of these similarities here the two most important things in the signature was a and as h and they both kind of dominated his autograph the next thing he underlines as you could see in this example okay so based on everything i see here rick no question this was signed by him and i'm being honest this is one of the coolest pieces i've actually seen come in here there's no doubt about i mean you never see something like this ever this item is awesome okay so what's it worth photographs three four hundred vintage stuff five six hundred dollars with that said this is something i'd value right around the 800 to thousand dollar range easily well thanks man i appreciate it good to see you take care good luck thank you yeah you bet there's no question about this piece being a great buy now if rick's able to get it for the store that thing would sell in a heartbeat so 400 bucks it's a deal would you be willing to go six well you wanted four well a little while ago that was before i listened to your expert probably should have never called a bed uh i'll tell you what um i'll go 500 bucks 500. hold on what do you think mother [Laughter] i don't think mother likes your bid [Laughter] would you go 5 50. i still have to get it framed up i still have to do a lot of stuff to sell it 500 bucks i think mother will take your offer cool write em up chub i don't know what mother's doing but come on let's go thanks i think mother's pretty ticked at me for settling for such a low price but i'm gonna take the money and buy myself some new musical instruments how you doing hey how are you what do you have here i brought you bob hope his original comic from 1950. hey rick what check this out it's a bob hope comic book oh that's pretty cool do you know who bob hope is the price is right no that's bob barker this is bob hope different old bop you know bob hope and bing crosby like jerry lewis and dean martin who like harold and kumar okay all right okay [Laughter] bob hope he was a pretty amazing guy he entertained troops in world war ii korea vietnam he was the only honorary veteran in the united states because he did so much stuff for the uso lived to be 100 years old 100 yep when he was in a movie it made money he was so popular he had his own comic book sweet bob hope was an absolute hollywood legend he was in over 70 films and he hosted the academy awards 19 times i'm just afraid anyone under the age of 50 doesn't really know who he is so um where did you get this i actually got this on an online auction okay well it looks in relatively good shape assuming you want to sell it yes how much you want for it i believe it might be worth about 500 i don't know how collectible bob hope is tell you the truth i just have no idea what the demand would be for this due to the fact that it's not an action hero it's bob hope it's a little weird yeah okay do you mind if i have someone look at it that'd be great i have a friend in town yeah he grades comics for a living he knows what he's doing i'll be right back i'll give him a call and um we'll go from there great i'm glad an expert's coming in to look at the comic just to be sure that it's all there and to get their opinion on the grade ah about number one i mean the whole weird thing is it's bob hope it's not like he's a superhero yeah in the 50s superheroes were going down they they weren't as popular and so what dc started to do is licensed celebrities they did stories in here that would relate to some of the movies coming out so they kind of did some cross marketing there okay the bob hope comic ran from issue one from 1950 all the way to 1968. i mean 18 years for for a continual run on a comic is pretty great so what's the great on this thing all right well it looks pretty nice it's got a few creases tear along the spine there it doesn't look restored at all a little bit of tanning that chip out at the top right you know i think cgc would give it about a 6-0 the big question is what's it worth that would put a certified 6-0 price at around 600 that's the price but are they easy to sell i mean most people my age we we know bob barker more than we know bob hope i told you so you're calling me old no you are old i'm just stating a fact anyway i think at 600 you can't go wrong okay thanks man i really appreciate it got it rick any time all right good to see you again see you next time take care people love first issues issue ones always are collectible how fast rick will sell it i really can't say i know he gets a lot of foot traffic through the shop and and i think you should be able to move it so what's your best price of this well if it's worth six and i'm only asking five i hope that's a great deal for bob i think bob would say the price is gonna have to be right i mean your problem here is it's bob hope i mean unless you're over 50 no one really knows who bob hope is anymore i think it's gonna be a tough sell i'll give you 300 bucks for it how about four hundred dollars i'll give you 3.25 and i won't go up anymore i mean that literally is it congratulations well thanks man i appreciate it the price is right all right let's go write it up i believe it was a win-win for that particular price i'm going to give the money to my wife and i have no idea what the hell she's going to do with it what are you laughing at this is bob hope comic the bob hope comic book hey you know bob hope like did new year's eve for like years and years and years he's got the airport named after him in california that was dick clark's rocking eve it's not dick clark international airport i know it's bob hope international airport never mind i'm just telling you those old comedians have nothing on the new wave of comedians why is it that all you guys ever want to do is argue with me you're always saying i refuse to learn anything i learned that bob hope and dick clark aren't the same person no kidding maybe you'll grow a brain one day coming from the guy reading comics old bob hope comics hello what in the world is this this is my starkey egg chair okay what's that it was originally used as a hearing test chair it's really cool it has speakers inside i don't know dude it looks pretty dr eviless you think your dad can sit in it yes fits imperfect we'll get him a little naked cat i came into the pawn shop today to sell my starkey egg chair a starkey egg chair is a hearing test chair used by audiologists to test people's hearing back in the 80s if i'm able to make a deal i will spend my money on a trip to italy with my husband ciao this looks cool so they would use them basically to help sell hearing aids and do ear tests on people yes and then they came out with noise cancelling headphones and way easier way more portable pretty much so does it work still or yes it does do you have a phone we can plug in uh yeah okay you need music yes and then sit in the chair does it sound any different or i can't hear anything all right we can we've heard enough out of the chair i can't hear you or you can see me get out of the chair dude this thing is sweet the egg chair got designed in the 60s but most people today recognize it from the movieman in black this particular model was designed for hearing test but it is kind of funky and it does have surround sounds so i'm pretty sure someone will buy it so what are you looking to do with it i am looking to sell it what are you looking to get out of it i'm asking a thousand that might be a little much okay um would you take 500 i would take 750. sounds like you'll take 500. i will take 750. 700. 7.25 700. all right joe john you want to write it up um or you could write it up and i can listen to music all right come with me okay 700 isn't exactly what i wanted for the chair but i'll take it pack your bags we're going to italy ciao you
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Channel: Pawn Stars
Views: 6,147,127
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: pawn, pawn stars, pawn stars episode, pawn stars full episode, the pawn stars, pawn star, pawn stars episodes, pawn stars chumlee, pawn shop, pawnstars, pawn stars old man, pawn stars full episodes, chumlee, watch pawn stars, pawn stars scenes, pawn stars clips, BIGGEST DEALS OF SEASON 13! *MARATHON*, BIGGEST DEALS OF SEASON 13!, marathon, pawn stars biggest deals, pawn stars marathon, netflix, pawn stars on netflix, pawn stars streaming, watch pawn stars online free, compilations
Id: Et0ffkSmY-0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 120min 31sec (7231 seconds)
Published: Fri Aug 05 2022
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